youth – Roger Whiting Murals & Illustration – Utah artist of custom murals and mosaicshttp://www.rogerwhiting.com
Community artist, mosaicist and muralistFri, 02 Sep 2016 04:00:06 +0000en-UShourly1https://wordpress.org/?v=4.4.5Kearns Libraryhttp://www.rogerwhiting.com/2014/12/19/kearns-library/
Fri, 19 Dec 2014 17:22:18 +0000http://www.rogerwhiting.com/?p=1992In 2014 the Kearns Library celebrated the 50th year since its opening. To commemorate this event they had a local muralist Melissa Chipman paint a beautiful mural on the concrete retaining wall on the east side of building.

With the mural finished, the retaining wall on the west side of the building was feeling bare. The Library administration turned to the local community to figure out an option of how to use the remaining paints. Jan, the program director of the Kearns Junior High Afterschool Program recommended to the library that I bring their kids over to beautify the wall.

Over a two-month period I brought the kids once a week to brainstorm, sketch, and paint the new mural. The images represent the role of a 21st century library, to make technology and learning available to all the local residents of the community.

]]>OUTRAGE! Anti-Tobacco Youth Group – Billboard Muralhttp://www.rogerwhiting.com/2013/10/09/outrage-anti-tobacco-youth-group/
Wed, 09 Oct 2013 04:55:48 +0000http://www.rogerwhiting.com/?p=1681In August 2013 I worked with the awesome teens of the OUTRAGE! anti-tobacco youth program of the Salt Lake County Health Department to paint this 9×18 foot mural. While one of the quickest and simplest projects I’ve ever done (one day brainstorming, two days wall prep and one day painting with a few touch-ups after), I think it’s got more visual punch than many of my other murals. Thanks to KSL 5 TV for covering the project!
]]>Harmony Park Housing – Painted muralhttp://www.rogerwhiting.com/2012/08/21/harmony-park-housing/
Tue, 21 Aug 2012 03:32:15 +0000http://www.rogerwhiting.com/?p=1578The teens and staff of the Leadership and Resiliency Program of the Housing Authority of the County of Salt Lake met with me and some of the local youth from the Harmony Park housing complex to brainstorm, design, and paint this mural in their community space. The main theme of the project was community: what the best aspects of their community were (also, what was missing from their community that they wish they had).

Thanks to artist Max Levi Frieder for assisting with the brainstorming day of the project.

The objective of the Eastside/Westside Project was to help foster an environment of mutual respect and understanding between the two communities by having youth from the two communities cooperate to create art.

This project had five components:

1. Two copies of a ceramic tile mural designed by the youth of YouthCity Central City and Lied Boys and Girls Club with Roger Whiting as lead artist. Designed completed at their respective locations. To be installed at both locations following exhibition at Sorenson Unity Center in June/July 2012.
2. A painted mural on cloth created by the youth of YouthCity Central City, Lied Boys and Girls Club and Sorenson Unity Center with Max Levi Frieder as lead artist and Roger Whiting as assistant. Created at the Sorenson Unity Center from June 21-22, 2012, with brainstorming and sketching activities at all three individual centers on June 20. On exhibition at Unity Center in June/July 2012.
3. Visual arts classes with YouthCity Central City and Lied Boys and Girls Club taught by artist Roger Whiting at their respective locations. YouthCity Central City classes (which included the mural class) occurred from October 2011 to May 2012. Lied BGC classes occurred from February 2012-May 2012.
4. Visual arts activities at the Halloween festival for Central City Recreation Center.
5. A mural unveiling / exhibition at the Sorenson Unity Center to which the local community was invited with free food and an art activity. Exhibition continues at the Unity Center with a copy of the ceramic tile mural and the painted mural both on display through the month of July.

]]>North Davis Preparatory Academy – Pillar Mosaicshttp://www.rogerwhiting.com/2012/05/29/ndpa-pillar-mosaics/
Tue, 29 May 2012 03:49:28 +0000http://www.rogerwhiting.com/?p=1529Chantal Esquivias is a Spanish teacher at NDPA and a native of Spain. Esquivias loved the school but thought that the building’s facade could be transformed to support the aesthetic point of view of the school’s Spanish immersion program. In early 2011 Esquivias contacted me to create a mosaic mural with the students.

After meeting with me in August, we both decided that decorating the pillars in front of the school, while an incredibly ambitious task, would result in the most transformative experience for the school.

In order to draw inspiration from Spain, I prefaced the brainstorming process of the project by teaching the students the history of mosaic art in Europe, with an emphasis on how Spanish artist Antonio Gaudí’s art was unique in that it was mosaic art that was clearly made of broken-up prefabricated tile (unlike Renaissance mosaics, which tried to look like paintings).

Sketches for the pillars were developed as the students read “Fairy Tales from Spain” by J. Munoz Escamez. Three tales, “The Judgment of the Flowers”, “The Garden of Health”, and “The Treasure of the Dragon” were chosen for depiction. The students summarized the tales, divided the story into its key moments, and created sketches of those moments in the stories. I then assembled the sketches into black and white designs for the mosaics, which the students colored. I then used those color studies to develop the final draft of the design.

The youth went before the school board in October to get the designs approved, and once a week for the next four months the students met with me to assemble the mosaics onto fiberglass mesh. Assembly was completed in January 2012.

Once the climate allowed, I returned to the school to begin installation. The students participated in almost all aspects of installation including mortaring the pillars, applying the mosaics, patching missing tiles, grouting the mosaics, and sealing the grout. Due to the size of the project, installation took about 60 hours, with students from Esquivias and Lucia Pascual’s classes providing most of the student labor.

Funding for the project was provided by Art Access Utah, in connection with the Utah State Office of Education Special Education Services Unit. Additional support funding for the project was supplied by NDPA and POET, the school’s parent organization.

]]>Viewmont Elementary School – Printed tile muralhttp://www.rogerwhiting.com/2012/03/26/1502/
Mon, 26 Mar 2012 15:08:22 +0000http://www.rogerwhiting.com/?p=1502I met with youth from Viewmont Elementary School in Murray once a week between October 2011 and January 2012. Students were chosen from the sixth grade classes of the school as well as from the population of youth receiving special education services. As the ability levels of the students involved in the project were very diverse, I developed a project to allow all the youth to express themselves and make a valuable contribution.

I taught the youth about the modernist art movement of the early twentieth century, and how it transitioned into the abstract expressionist art movement, creating artists such as Jackson Pollock who created art by splatter-painting. I also taught the youth about Eric Carle, a youth who grew up in Nazi Germany and learned the value of free self-expression which he used later in life to design beautiful children’s books using collages of splattered and scribbled papers.

The youth then spent the next few weeks using techniques such as splattering, scribbling and sgraffito to create dynamic textures on colored papers which they used to create collages of the alphabet. Those collages were then printed onto ceramic tiles using a service called Change Your Art. The tiles were installed in a mural at Cricket Care, the Murray School District’s daycare center benefiting teen parents. I also worked with the youth to assemble the mosaic border surrounding the tiles.

On Friday, March 23rd at 4:00pm an unveiling was held at Cricket Care to celebrate the youths’ accomplishments in completing this mural.

See also the Press Release at the Murray School District website, adapted from my project description.

This project was made possible by a grant from Art Access, in cooperation with VSA Arts Utah and the Utah State Office of Education Special Education Services Unit.

]]>Kearns Junior High School – Mural and Mosaicshttp://www.rogerwhiting.com/2012/03/01/kearns-jr-high-in-progress/
Thu, 01 Mar 2012 19:13:39 +0000http://www.rogerwhiting.com/?p=1484Teenagers at Kearns Junior High worked with me from October 2011 until April 2012 to create a 60-foot-long work of art showing the core values they represent.

For the first stage of the project the youth brainstormed and sketched ways to show the value statement of the school: that the students should be effective communicators, critical thinkers, responsible citizens, and life long learners. In order to show these concepts, the youth sketched flags, flowers, buildings, the White House, etc. The youth then acted out these different ideas. The photographs of their poses were traced to create the silhouettes of the mural. These sketches and silhouettes were collaged to create the design of the mural. Finally, the next few months were spent painting the design.

For the second stage of the project, the youth decided which core values were most important to them, such as caring, open-mindedness, creativity, etc. The youth then designed the 30-foot mosaic section of the mural on the outside of the school based upon these values. The youth’s vision ended up being much more colorful, silly and fun.

The project was made possible by a generous grant from Target Corporation to ShelterKids, with additional support by Salt Lake County Youth Services, which directs the after-school program at Kearns Junior High.

The mural was unveiled at the Kearns After School Parent Night on April 25th.

In July to August 2011 I led a month-long project with a diverse group of about 15 teenagers from the Housing Authority of the County of Salt Lake’s teen program in order to create a mural about West Valley City.

The result is a bright, bold, colorful mural showing cultural landmarks of the city such as Hale Theater, the Maverik Center, the Kadheema Islamic Center, and the Utah Cultural Celebration Center. Surrounding these landmarks are foods and people representing the culturally diverse residents of West Valley City and plants showing the rich natural habitats in the city.

The Leadership and Resiliency Program of the Housing Authority is an after-school program for teens ages 12-18 whose families live in low-income Public Housing Communities. By participating in service learning the teens are able to become active members of the community and gain empowerment by helping others.*

Since the Program transports teens from all over the the county, most of the teens were unfamiliar with West Valley City. In order to figure out what makes the city tick, the youth first read through the city’s website, and paid special attention to details that defined the city’s culture and heritage. The youth spent a day at the Jordan River creating nature sketches. Finally, in order to learn the residents’ perceptions of the city the youth received permission from Valley Fair Mall to interview visitors about what they thought about the city.

Once all this research was complete, the youth and I created sketches to reflect what they had learned, visiting various significant locations throughout the city. The resulting sketches were cut out and collaged into the design which was then projected onto the wall of the community space at the Academy Park housing complex. The youth then met the next two weeks painting the mural with me.

In July 2011 I received an assignment from the Sandy Central Stake of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints to direct the construction of a float for the 2011 Day’s of ’47 Parade.

I helped to put together a committee and picked up a float base from Deseret Transportation. Using a modest budget of $5500 (included budget for warehouse rental), my committee and I created the float between February and July 2011.

As committee chair for the float, I created the original design for the float, and I took the lead of float decoration. Assignments were made for a construction lead (Brent Wade), a welding/mechanical lead (Pat Porter), a secretary (Charlene Clark), and a food chairman (Mike Raleigh), all of whom were critical in the success of the project.

As lead decorator I led 13 youth activities with eight different LDS youth groups. In these activities we created and/or installed decorations for the float. I also helped to organize activities for adults to help with the construction and decoration of elements of the float.

The float participated in the Sandy Fourth of July Parade as well as the 2011 Days of ’47 Parade.

All work on the float, including my own, was done as volunteer service for the church.

I met with students of Riley Elementary for 11 weeks from early January to late March to brainstorm, sketch, and create the tiles for the mural. Included in the project were youth in the after-school program as well as youth in the “Colors of Success” program.

-While brainstorming the past, students defined the culture of their parents’ upbringing in terms of food, clothing, technology, nature, language, beliefs, etc.

-In brainstorming the presents, students’ ideas for changing the world included recycling, working, and helping out the homeless (with detailed discussion about both short-term and long-term solutions for eliminating poverty).

-Finally, while brainstorming the future, students listed all the needs that people have, and individually came up with solutions of how people could meet those needs in the future (needs included food, water, nature, space, family, light, life, education, peace, etc).

After brainstorming, the students drew sketches using visual symbols to represent the different ideas that they had brainstormed for all three sections of the mural. For the past, students each handcrafted tiles as miniature relief sculptures of their sketches, which were later clear-coated. For the present, students were allowed to work in pairs to sketch their ideas and handcraft the resulting tiles. For the future, students all created sketches. I then collaged the ideas into a composition representing the ideal future of the Glendale neighborhood. Once the tiles were completed, they were handed over the school district’s tile specialists for installation.

Besides the ceramic mosaic mural, I also hosted two family art nights at the school to which parents and siblings of all Riley Elementary School students were invited. Participants at these events (over 100 attended each event) created handcrafted ceramic bowls and puppets.

This project was funded by an Arts Learning Grant from the Salt Lake City Arts Council with additional support by the Salt Lake City School District Fine Arts Department, Salt Lake Education Foundation, and Riley Elementary. Special credit to Bobbie Kirby, principal of Riley Elementary for helping to develop the mural’s concept, Lynn Green for assistance directing the youth during the project, and Rosanne Henderson for assistance and support through all stages of the project.